Le Pecq: Of a world in coronavirus turmoil, they may know little or nothing. Submariners stealthily cruising the ocean deeps, purposefully shielded from worldly worries to encourage an undivided focus on their top-secret missions of nuclear deterrence, may be among the last pockets of people anywhere who are still blissfully unaware of how the pandemic is turning life upside down.
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Mariners aboard ballistic submarines are habitually spared bad news while underwater to avoid undermining their morale, said current and former officers who served aboard France's nuclear-armed subs. So any crews that left port before the virus spread around the globe are likely being kept in the dark about the extent of the rapidly unfurling crisis by their commanders until their return, they say.
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"They won't know," said retired Admiral Dominique Salles, who commanded the French ballistic submarine squadron from 2003-2006. "The boys need to be completely available for their mission."
Speaking exclusively to The Associated Press, Salles said that he believes submariners will likely only be told of the pandemic as they head back to port, in the final two days of their mission.
"Those who are at sea don't need this information," said Salles, who also commanded the nuclear-armed French submarine "L'Inflexible".
"The commander, I think, is doubtless informed about what is happening. I don't think he'll have all the details," he said.
The French navy won't divulge what has or hasn't been said to submarine crews. Nor will it say whether any of the four French ballistic submarines, laden with 16 missiles that each can carry six nuclear warheads, left harbour before the country instituted a nationwide lockdown on March 17.
"Because the deterrent is wrapped in a bubble of protection and confidentiality, it is impossible to know whether the crews are informed or not of this situation," French navy spokesman Lt. Cmdr. Olivier Ribard said.
French submarine missions last 60 to 70 days, with about 110 crew members aboard. So a crew that left at the end of February wouldn't be expected back before the end of April. In that case, they will return to a world changed by the pandemic.
On March 1, France had just 130 confirmed COVID-19 cases and two deaths. In under a month, those numbers have surged past 2,600 dead and over 40,000 sickened.